Medical-Grade vs Ordinary Silicone Tubes: How to Tell the Difference
With the fast development of the medical device industry, demand for medical-grade silicone tubes keeps rising.
Telling them apart from ordinary silicone tubes has become critical to avoiding safety risks.
Many users mix up the two types, but they are fundamentally different in three core areas:
raw materials, safety certification, and application scenarios.
1. Raw Materials
- Medical-grade silicone tubes:
Use high-purity raw materials, with no recycled materials or harmful additives.
- Ordinary silicone tubes:
Use industrial-grade, low-purity materials and may contain impurities.
2. Safety Certification
- Medical-grade:
Must pass authoritative certifications such as ISO 10993 and USP Class VI — the official “medical safety pass”.
- Ordinary:
Have no medical safety certifications at all.
3. Application Scenarios
- Medical-grade:
Can directly contact the human body, deliver medical fluids, and resist high-temperature sterilization.
Used in hospitals, medical devices, and laboratory testing.
- Ordinary:
Only for industrial sealing, general drainage, and other non-medical uses.
Cannot be used for human contact or drug delivery.
Mixing them up not only endangers medical safety but also violates industry regulations, leading to serious potential risks.
